<p>Before the heyday of the Chitlin Circuit and the Harlem Renaissance African American performing artists and creative entrepreneurs&#x2014;sometimes called Black Bohemians&#x2014;seized their limited freedoms and gained both fame and fortune with their work in a white-dominated marketplace.&#xA0;These Black performers plied their trade in circuses blues tents and Wild West Shows with Native Americans.&#xA0;The era&#x2019;s traveling entertainments often promoted the &#x201C;disappearing Indian&#x201D; myth and promoted racial hierarchies with Black and Native people at the bottom. But in a racial economy rooted in settler-colonialism and legacies of enslavement Black and Indigenous performers found that otherness could be a job qualification.&#xA0;Whether as artists or manual laborers these workers rejected marginalization by traveling the world making a solid living off their talents and building platforms for political and social critique.&#xA0; Eventually America&#x2019;s popular entertainment industry could not survive without Black and Native Americans&#x2019; creative labor.&#xA0;As audiences came to eagerly anticipate their genius these performers paved the way for greater social economic and cultural autonomy.<br/><br/>Sakina M. Hughes provides a conceptually rich work revealing memorable individuals&#x2014;laborers artists and entrepreneurs&#x2014;who faced with danger and discrimination created surprising opportunities to showcase their talents and gain fame wealth and mobility.</p>
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